Pa opened his arms and she rushed into them. His ribs quaked and he shook, crying and murmuring in German.
“How long?” she asked, pulling back.
Pa blinked, his eyes red-rimmed and bleary. “Two days. Funeral’s tomorrow.”
Her shoulders fell. Denying herself with Robbie wouldn’t have made a difference, after all. “Can I see her?”
Pa nodded. “She’s laid out in the parlor.” He cleared his throat and threw back his shoulders in his proud Werner way. “I’ll start some tea. Are you hungry, poppet?”
Deirdre’s stomach gave a hearty rumble despite her grief. The food in the café had been middling and spare, and her shoulders ached from sleeping on the cramped second-class banquette, wedged between the other passengers. “I reckon so. After I take my time with her, ’course.”
Pa nodded brusquely and opened the door. The cloying scent of lilies crawled up Deirdre’s nostrils. It was always lilies or roses at a wake—their strong, sweet perfume helped mask the stench of death.
She took off her lace gloves and pulled in a steadying breath. Regret and guilt clashed within her. The last words she’d spoken to Mama had been harsh. And Mama’s to her. Their relationship had always been contentious, fraught. But for all that, Deirdre still knew the softness within Mama’s hardness. The calm way she delivered babies and soothed mothers. The way she’d come into Deirdre’s room for evening prayers, and her patience with teaching Deirdre about the saints and how to read the Bible.
She followed Pa inside, steeling herself. He’d done things well. Candles were lit on the mantle and black crepe draped over the mirrors and windows. The fine casket sat upon trestles, smelling of freshly hewn pine. Mama’s head rested lightly on a lacework pillow, her garnet rosary wound around her crossed hands. But she was a husk of the robust woman she’d once been. Beneath her finest calico, the jut of her hip bones was visible. Her collarbone and wrists were as fine and brittle as a sparrow’s bones. Her lips were chapped and slightly parted, enough so Deirdre could see the blackness within.
Pa cleared his throat. “I’ll leave you to it.”
Deirdre put her fingers to her mouth and squeezed her eyes shut for a moment, gathering her senses and her words. Perhaps Mama’s spirit still lingered here. Perhaps she might glean some solace from saying what she’d meant to say had Mama still been drawing breath.
She leaned close to the casket, so Pa wouldn’t hear from the kitchen. “Mama,” she began, “I’m sorry I didn’t make it home in time to see you. I tried. I promise I did.”
The clock on the mantle ticked on, measuring the time that Mama would never experience again. It was surreal, how everything continued, how everything kept on after a person died. Shouldn’t time stop for grief, even for a moment, so one might catch their breath before things started moving again?
Deirdre tilted her head back. A long, wavering sigh escaped from her mouth. “I’ve learned a lot since I been away. A lot more than manners and fancy talk. I’ve learned about life and how people love each other. And even though the secret I kept for you tore me up inside, I think I understand.” A long-held tear flowed down her cheek.
“I fell in love in Charleston. I never thought I could hold space for more love in my heart than I felt for Robbie, but I fell in love, all the same. There’s a girl—she’s so pretty, Mama. Sweeter than clover spun honey. Her name’s Esme. She’s upset at me for leaving her, but I had to.
“I understand now how you could love Pa and Arthur. Both. There’s all kinds of love, and one ain’t any better than the other. And I also understand that bein’ a woman ain’t the easiest thing, and sometimes a woman’s got to find her peace and happiness wherever she can. I forgive you. And I hope, wherever you are, you can forgive me, too.”
Deirdre wiped the wetness from her eyes and bent to kiss the cool dryness of Mama’s forehead. “I love you, Mama. And I’m so glad to be home.”
Deirdre sat across the table from Pa, trying not to look at Mama’s empty chair. He slid a mug of steaming tea toward her. She stirred milk and two spoonfuls of sugar into it and swirled a circle with her spoon. Her hands shook. “Did she go easy?”
Pa nodded, working his top lip under his teeth. “Easy enough. I had the priest come down from Blue Eye. He heard her confession and gave her the last rites, the way she wanted.”
“She looks good, Pa. You did good.”
Pa made a sharp sound at the back of his throat, somewhere between a laugh and a cough. “I ain’t never seen a corpse look good, Deirdre Jane. But folks always find the need to say that, I reckon.” He smiled for the first time since she’d arrived. “How was the school?”
“It was good, for the most part. Met some friends. Learned how to dance and talk right.” Nevertheless, her hill cadence had already come back. Her vowels were longer than the June solstice. It was good to be home and among people who weren’t always putting on airs. Charleston was pretty, but it wasn’t where she belonged.
“I’m glad,” Pa said, nodding again. “I didn’t want to tell you this while you were away, but Hannah Bledsoe’s little one died. Took sick with some sort of fading malady.”
Deirdre sat back in her chair with a hard huff of air. She thought of the soft, warm smell of Collin’s baby-soft skin, the giggles and coos she could coax from him as she rocked him. She took a swallow of her tea. It was sad, but babies died all the time for all sorts of reasons. It was part of life.
“June. That’s when her young ’un died. Your Mama took sicker than I ever seen her around then, too. I quit the railroad to take care of her. I’ve a mind they’ll let me come back after everything’s settled, though.”
Deirdre searched the corners for shadows. She absently stroked the healed-over cut on her palm. She wondered about Phoebe. If Mama’s healing with Gentry didn’t hold true, Phoebe’s might not, either. The thought blackened her mood even more.
Pa brought a loaf of molasses bread out from the hearth, and they sat together in amiable silence as they ate. After they finished, Deirdre fidgeted in her seat, the question she most wanted to ask on her lips for a long time before she put it forth. It was hard to speak of her own future, with Mama dead in the other room. “Robbie brought me home. I saw him in Rogers. Goodness, has Rogers grown, just like you said it would.” She took a sip of her tea. “Has Robbie been by yet? To ask for my hand?”
Pa wrinkled his brows. “No, poppet, he hasn’t. And there’s something I need to tell you, but I didn’t want to say it in a letter.” He reached out, his calloused hand warm over Deirdre’s, which had suddenly gone cold. “He’s married Ingrid.”
Everything slowed down. “Ing?”
“I’d hoped he’d tell you himself. They got hitched a month or so ago. I was afraid Maja was gonna have to get her shotgun out. Ingrid’s bigger than the broad side of a barn with his child. I’m sorry, poppet. There are other fine men. Better men than Robbie. Why, there’s a young engineer . . .”
Papa’s words faded as a thousand feelings ran through Deirdre at once. Anger. Embarrassment. Hurt. She stood from the table, shaking.